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Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching [Kõva köide]

Edited by (University of Victoria, British Columbia), Edited by (Carleton University, Ottawa)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 820 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 250x180x51 mm, kaal: 1560 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Sari: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108499104
  • ISBN-13: 9781108499101
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 820 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 250x180x51 mm, kaal: 1560 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Sari: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Mar-2021
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108499104
  • ISBN-13: 9781108499101
Teised raamatud teemal:
Corrective feedback is a vital pedagogical tool in language learning. This is the first volume to provide an in-depth analysis and discussion of the role of corrective feedback in second and foreign language learning and teaching. Written by leading scholars, it assembles cutting-edge research and state-of-the-art articles that address recent developments in core areas of corrective feedback including oral, written, computer-mediated, nonverbal, and peer feedback. The chapters are a combination of both theme-based and original empirical studies carried out in diverse second and foreign language contexts. Each chapter provides a concise review of its own topic, discusses theoretical and empirical issues not adequately addressed before, and identifies their implications for classroom instruction and future research. It will be an essential resource for all those interested in the role of corrective feedback in second and foreign language learning and how they can be used to enhance classroom teaching.

Muu info

The first of its kind, this collection provides analysis and discussion of corrective feedback in second language learning and teaching.
List of Figures
x
List of Tables
xi
List of Contributors
xiii
Acknowledgments xxi
Introduction: Corrective Feedback in Second Language Teaching and Learning 1(20)
Hossein Nassaji
Eva Kartchava
Part I Theoretical Perspectives on Corrective Feedback
21(88)
1 Corrective Feedback from Behaviorist and Innatist Perspectives
23(21)
ZhaoHong Han
2 Interactionist Approach to Corrective Feedback in Second Language Acquisition
44(21)
Rebekha Abbuhl
3 Cognitive Theoretical Perspectives of Corrective Feedback
65(20)
Ronald P. Leow
Meagan Driver
4 Corrective Feedback from a Sociocultural Perspective
85(24)
Hossein Nassaji
Part II Methodological Approaches in the Study of Corrective Feedback
109(76)
5 Tools to Measure the Effectiveness of Feedback
111(19)
Alison Mackey
Lara Bryfonski
Ozgur Parlak
Ashleigh Pipes
Aysenur Sagdic
Bo-Ram Suh
6 Laboratory-Based Oral Corrective Feedback
130(17)
Shawn Loewen
Susan M. Gass
7 Classroom-Based Research in Corrective Feedback
147(17)
Antonella Valeo
8 Meta-Analysis and Research Synthesis
164(21)
Dan Brown
Part III Different Delivery Modes of Corrective Feedback
185(88)
9 Oral Corrective Feedback
187(20)
Rhonda Oliver
Rebecca Adams
10 Written Corrective Feedback John Bitchener
207(19)
11 Technology-Mediated Corrective Feedback
226(25)
Trude Heift
Phuong Nguyen
Volker Hegelheimer
12 Gestures, Corrective Feedback, and Second Language Development
251(22)
Kimi Nakatsukasa
Part IV Feedback Provider, Feedback Intensity, and Feedback Timing
273(92)
13 Peer Feedback in Second Language Oral Interaction
275(25)
Noriko Iwashita
Phung Dao
14 Focused versus Unfocused Corrective Feedback Catherine van
300(22)
Beuningen
15 Corrective Feedback Timing and Second Language Grammatical Development: Research, Theory, and Practice
322(19)
Paul Gregory Quinn
16 Explicit and Implicit Oral Corrective Feedback
341(24)
Rod Ellis
Part V Corrective Feedback and Language Skills
365(106)
17 Corrective Feedback and the Development of Second Language Grammar
367(20)
Helen Basturkmen
Mengxia Fu
18 Corrective Feedback and the Development of Second Language Vocabulary
387(20)
Nobuhiro Kamiya
Tatsuya Nakata
19 Effects of Corrective Feedback on Second Language Pronunciation Development
407(22)
Kazuya Saito
20 Corrective Feedback in Instructional Pragmatics
429(21)
Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig
Yucel Yilmaz
21 Alphabetic Print Literacy Level and Noticing Oral Corrective Feedback in SLA
450(21)
Elaine Tarone
Part VI Contexts of Corrective Feedback and Their Effects
471(88)
22 Corrective Feedback in Second versus Foreign Language Contexts Maria del Pilar
473(21)
Garcia Mayo
Ruth Milla
23 Corrective Feedback in Computer-Mediated versus Face-to-Face Environments
494(26)
Luis Cerezo
24 Corrective Feedback in Mobile Technology-Mediated Contexts
520(19)
Eva Kartchava
Hossein Nassaji
25 Oral Corrective Feedback in Content-Based Contexts
539(20)
Susan Ballinger
Part VII Learners' and Teachers' Feedback Perspectives, Perceptions, and Preferences
559(84)
26 Teachers' and Students' Beliefs and Perspectives about Corrective Feedback
561(20)
YouJin Kim
Tamanna Mostafa
27 Written Corrective Feedback and Learners' Objects, Beliefs, and Emotions
581(17)
Neomy Storch
28 The Role of Training in Feedback Provision and Effectiveness
598(22)
Eva Kartchava
29 Perceptions and Noticing of Corrective Feedback
620(23)
Reiko Yoshida
Part VIII Individual Differences, Tasks, and Other Language- and Learner-Related Factors
643(153)
30 Age and Corrective Feedback
645(23)
Alyssa Vuono
Shaofeng Li
31 Gender Effects
668(21)
Rebecca Adams
Lauren Ross-Feldman
32 Feedback, Aptitude, and Multilingualism
689(24)
Beatriz Lado
Cristina Sanz
33 Corrective Feedback and Affect
713(20)
Jaemyung Goo
Takaaki Takeuchi
34 Corrective Feedback, Developmental Readiness, and Language Proficiency
733(21)
Miroslaw Pawlak
35 Corrective Feedback and Grammatical Complexity: A Research Synthesis
754(23)
Gisela Granena
Yucel Yilmaz
36 The Role of Task in the Efficacy of Corrective Feedback
777(19)
Pauline Foster
Martyn McGettigan
Index 796
Hossein Nassaji is Professor of Applied Linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Victoria, Canada. He maintains active research agenda across various areas of second language teaching and learning and has authored numerous publications on these topics. Eva Kartchava is Associate Professor in the School of Linguistics and Language Studies at Carleton University, Canada. She has published research on the relationship between corrective feedback and second language learning, noticeability of feedback, and the role of individual differences in the language learning process.